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Huge round saves Taylor's season

After shooting the round of his life to preserve his PGA Tour status, Canadian golfer Nick Taylor chose to mark the achievement with a modest celebration.

He and his wife, Andie, who just turned 30, went to Wendy's for ice cream.

“It was a roller-coaster week, let alone day,” Taylor, from Abbotsford, B.C., said in a phone interview.

“We were just so exhausted.”

A winner on the PGA Tour in 2014, Taylor was outside the top 125 on the FedEx Cup standings going into last week at the Wyndham Championship.

His seven-under-par 63 on Sunday (his low round of the year) helped move him to 119th, which allows him to pick and choose his schedule on the PGA Tour next year.

“I knew just making the cut and getting to the weekend wasn't what I needed," said Taylor. ”I needed a top-25 finish at minimum.

“I feel like that helped me," he added. "If I just tried to make the cut, I might have been a little tighter and a little more defensive.”

Taylor said his season was an interesting one. He had three-straight top-25 finishes in the first three events but then missed six-straight cuts through March and into May.

He began working with new swing coach Mark McCann in May after The Players Championship and things have turned around favourably since.

“There was a different eye and different opinion, and that helped,” Taylor said.

“It kind of saved the season.”

Taylor now will play The Northern Trust at Ridgewood Country Club in New Jersey this week—the first FedEx Cup playoff event.

Fellow Abbotsford golfer Adam Hadwin, who is 70th in the FedEx Cup standings, also is in the field.

Taylor said he feels like he's got “nothing to lose” this week.

“I'm playing with house money a little bit,” he reasoned.

“I'm still trying to win and move on, but definitely not as much pressure as last week.”

Corey Conners of Listowel, Ont., Ben Silverman of Thornhill, Ont., and David Hearn of Brantford, Ont. all finished outside the top 125 and will play the four-tournament Web.com Tour finals to try to improve on their PGA Tour status for next year.

Conners (130th), Silverman (136th), and Hearn (138th) will play out of the category for golfers 126-150 on the FedEx Cup standings and have partial status.

Hearn was in that category this season and still played 21 tournaments.

Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask. finished 185th on the FedEx Cup standings but will start next year on a major medical exemption after having back surgery on August 3.

DeLaet's agent, Danny Fritz, said in an e-mail to The Canadian Press “all went well" and he is "resting and on the road to recovery.”

Mackenzie Hughes, of Dundas, Ont., is fully exempt next year after his win at The RSM Classic in 2016.